An experiment was conducted to determine if two personality factors, egocentricity and paranormal belief, influenced people’s assertions about ostensible psychic factors involved in coincidences. Participants (N = 75) were presented with six coincidences from two literary sources (Jung, 1973; Plimmer & King, 2004), and were then asked to rate them on degree of paranormality. Since some people believe that some coincidences are too astounding to have normal explanations, it was theorised that there is a relationship between paranormal belief and attribution of psychic causes to coincidences. The egocentricity bias is a bias brought about by egocentrism, which is defined as the belief that another person’s perceptions and knowledge bases are ...
Previous research has established a relationship between thinking styles (intuitive-experiential and...
Under conditions of uncertainty, people tend to make systematic and predictable errors in their judg...
Studies exploring relationships between belief in the paranormal and vulnerability to cognitive bias...
Two studies examine the impact event vividness, event severity, and prior paranormal belief has on c...
Believers tend to view the experience of coincidences as evidence for a variety of paranormal belief...
Given the hypothesized relationship between paranormal belief and attribution of psychic causes to c...
The major aim of this confirmatory study was to determine possible underlying causes of paranormal b...
This paper consists of two parts. In the first, we discuss the neuropsychological correlates of beli...
Previous research proposes that endorsement of anomalous beliefs is associated with proneness to con...
Paranormal beliefs, regardless of their veracity, clearly constitute an important dimension of human...
Paranormal beliefs are held by a large proportion of the population, yet the existence of paranormal...
Numerous studies suggest individuals who endorse paranormal concepts such as ESP are especially pron...
The main aim of this exploratory study was to determine new or not fully investigated correlates of ...
Studies have shown that paranormal belief is correlated with numerous variables, including schizotyp...
The present paper examined relationships between schizotypy (measured by the Oxford-Liverpool Inven...
Previous research has established a relationship between thinking styles (intuitive-experiential and...
Under conditions of uncertainty, people tend to make systematic and predictable errors in their judg...
Studies exploring relationships between belief in the paranormal and vulnerability to cognitive bias...
Two studies examine the impact event vividness, event severity, and prior paranormal belief has on c...
Believers tend to view the experience of coincidences as evidence for a variety of paranormal belief...
Given the hypothesized relationship between paranormal belief and attribution of psychic causes to c...
The major aim of this confirmatory study was to determine possible underlying causes of paranormal b...
This paper consists of two parts. In the first, we discuss the neuropsychological correlates of beli...
Previous research proposes that endorsement of anomalous beliefs is associated with proneness to con...
Paranormal beliefs, regardless of their veracity, clearly constitute an important dimension of human...
Paranormal beliefs are held by a large proportion of the population, yet the existence of paranormal...
Numerous studies suggest individuals who endorse paranormal concepts such as ESP are especially pron...
The main aim of this exploratory study was to determine new or not fully investigated correlates of ...
Studies have shown that paranormal belief is correlated with numerous variables, including schizotyp...
The present paper examined relationships between schizotypy (measured by the Oxford-Liverpool Inven...
Previous research has established a relationship between thinking styles (intuitive-experiential and...
Under conditions of uncertainty, people tend to make systematic and predictable errors in their judg...
Studies exploring relationships between belief in the paranormal and vulnerability to cognitive bias...